The windowless
“window” seats.
Some seats sold as “window” have no window behind them. An A/C duct, an electrical conduit, a structural blank — just a wall. United and Delta are being sued over it. Here's every one we've found. Free.
Every windowless window seat we've found.
The seat is there. The window isn't.
On certain 737, 757, and A321 variants, rows 11–12 (give or take, depending on the airline) sit right behind the A/C ducting that runs cabin air from front to back. The window opening exists in the fuselage, but the inside wall is closed off. You're looking at a panel, not the sky.
Other versions of the same problem: behind a galley, between cabins, or where electrical conduit runs vertically up the wall.
American and Alaska flag this on their seat maps. Delta and United don't — even though they charge the same window-seat upcharge for the row anyway. That's what the class-action is about.
We list every one we've found. No signup, no paywall.
Tell us — we'll add it to the list.
We'd rather have noisy reports we triage than miss real ones.